FREE Ground Shipping site-wide. No minimums. Excludes PR, HI, AK, AS, VI, WA.
Most coin envelopes are brown kraft. This one is white, and that choice matters for specific applications. White takes printed labels crisply, photographs cleanly in product or archival documentation, coordinates with white organizational systems, and looks right in retail or professional counter environments where brown kraft reads as utilitarian rather than branded. The #7 white coin envelope is 2 7/8 x 4 7/8 inches with a short-side opening, 24 lb white stock, and a peel-and-seal closure. Seal it on contact pressure with no moisture needed. Available blank or with custom printing from Business Envelopes. Free shipping, no minimums.
Brown kraft is the default coin envelope material and it's the right choice for most storage and mailing applications. But white coin envelopes serve specific situations where brown doesn't work as well.
Retail and jewelry counter use is the most common case. A white envelope holding a ring or a small piece of jewelry at a repair counter looks professional when handed to a customer. A brown kraft envelope in the same context looks like something from a parts bin. The white surface also photographs cleaner for insurance documentation, appraisal records, and inventory systems where the envelope contents are photographed in place.
Medical and pharmacy applications are another. White coin envelopes in specimen handling, sample labeling, and medication packaging fit within clinical environments where everything else is white and the brown of kraft creates a visual inconsistency that matters in organized, inspected settings.
Label printing is cleaner on white. A thermal printed label on a white coin envelope has higher contrast and reads better under barcode scanners than the same label on brown kraft. For any operation using label printers for inventory management, the white surface is the practical call.
A gum flap coin envelope needs moisture. For a few pieces at a time, that's not an issue. For a retail counter sealing 50 envelopes in an afternoon, or a pharmacy packaging batch samples, or a collector processing a large lot, the gum flap adds a step and introduces inconsistency: not every flap gets the same amount of moisture, and under-moistened flaps eventually lift in storage. The peel-and-seal strip on this envelope removes that entirely. Peel the liner, press the flap shut, done. The adhesive bonds on contact pressure and holds consistently whether you're sealing one envelope or a hundred. The protective liner keeps the adhesive inert in storage until you're ready to seal.
For the #7 white coin envelope with a gum flap instead of peel-and-seal, see the #7 White Coin Envelope Gum Flap. For the brown kraft version of the #7 with gum flap, see the #7 Brown Coin Envelope Gum Flap. For the brown kraft #7 with peel-and-seal, see the #7 Brown Coin Envelope Peel and Seal. Browse the full coin envelope range for all sizes and closure options.
There are no reviews for this product yet. Add a new one clicking here.